How to Use Videos for Lead Generation

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

Summary

Videos are a powerful way to build trust, create emotional connections, and stand out in crowded sales outreach, making them an invaluable tool for lead generation.

  • Create personalized content: Tailor your video message to highlight the prospect's unique challenges and position your solution as the key to overcoming them.
  • Add emotional value: Speak directly to your audience with energy, empathy, and authenticity to make your message memorable and relatable.
  • Use strategic delivery: Share your videos via email, social media, or direct messages to ensure they’re seen and spark engagement.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Chris Schembra 🍝
    Chris Schembra 🍝 Chris Schembra 🍝 is an Influencer

    Rolling Stone & CNBC Columnist | #1 WSJ Bestselling Author | Keynote Speaker on Leadership, Belonging & Culture | Unlocking Human Potential in the Age of AI

    57,190 followers

    Most people send a plain text email after a great sales call. I send a video. The screenshot below is a real follow-up I sent after a prospect meeting. Instead of just recapping in writing, I recorded a 2-minute Loom video sharing what I learned, what I’m envisioning for their event, and why I’m genuinely excited to work together. In today’s world of noise and automation, a video like this is a humanizer. It gives them something to feel, not just something to read, and it gives them a powerful tool to forward to their internal decision-makers. The psychology behind this is fascinating. When someone sees your face and hears your voice, it activates the mirror neuron system in their brain, essentially helping them feel emotionally connected to you, as if they’re in the same room. That’s empathy. That’s trust. And trust is what drives decisions. Research shows that only 7% of communication is verbal; the rest is tone, facial expression, and body language. In a sales process full of text and data, the human brain craves the richness of video. It’s also about cognitive ease. According to research from Princeton and the University of Michigan, people are more likely to trust and act on information that feels easy to process. A clear, engaging video makes your message stickier. Add a little story, a little emotion, a little spark, and suddenly you’re not just another vendor in the inbox. You’re a trusted voice. Taking the time to send a video builds social capital. It says, “I care.” It says, “This mattered to me.” That emotional generosity has ripple effects in a referral-driven business. So if you’re trying to stand out, build relationships, and grow your business, try adding a short, heartfelt Loom video to your follow-ups. Whether it’s a cold prospect, a warm lead, or a longtime client, your energy is your edge. Presence beats polish every time. Link to how to use Loom is in the comments. Happy Monday ya'll, let's go scale our impact.

  • View profile for 🔥 Tom Slocum
    🔥 Tom Slocum 🔥 Tom Slocum is an Influencer

    Helping B2B Teams Fix Outbound → Build Pipelines That Convert | Sales Coach | SDR Builder | Top LinkedIn Voice | Your Future Homie In Law

    30,861 followers

    Ready to make your prospects the star of the show? Let me put you on to a play I used to run as a rep that still hits hard in trainings today “The Heros Trailer” video play Picture this Your prospect is the hero facing their big challenge (cue the dramatic music) Your job? Help them see how your product is the missing piece they need to overcome it Heres how you can run it 1. Highlight their journey In your video don’t make it all about you—make it all about them. Show that you understand their current struggle - “Here’s the challenge you’re likely dealing with and heres how we help heroes like you solve it” 2. Tease the solution Like any good movie trailer you’ve got to keep it intriguing. Don’t spill all the beans. Give just enough so they’re curious to see how it all plays out. This isn’t the full demo. it’s a teaser. “Imagine if you had a tool that does [X] you’d be able to achieve [Y]” 3. Back it up with credibility Drop in “reviews” from other heroes (aka testimonials) “Sara and Mike were in the same boat but after using [our product] they saw XYZ results” now you’ve got their attention and you’ve built trust without sounding pushy 4. The big CTA End with a cliffhanger “Let’s schedule a time for you to see the full picture” make it feel like a VIP screening they can’t miss 5. Get creative with distribution It’s not just about the video—it’s how you deliver it. Send it via email, LinkedIn DM or even a voice note follow up. Your goal is to cut through the noise and give them something different—something that makes them feel like you really get their journey The reason this works? You’re not just pitching you’re positioning yourself as the guide that helps them shine It’s all about their success story When SDRs in recent trainings tested this play they started landing meetings they’d been chasing for weeks The feedback? “This feels more like a conversation than a sales pitch—it’s engaging” So next time you’re setting up your outreach ask yourself How can you help your prospect see themselves as the hero in their story—and position your product as the tool that helps them get there? Give this play a shot and let me know how it goes 🤘

  • View profile for zoë hartsfield

    running influencer marketing @ fullenrich | personal brand, social selling + productivity | ask me about ghostwriting + founder brands

    70,479 followers

    I sent over 4000+ video messages when prospecting back in my SDR days. Here are 3 types of videos that got me more replies than the rest:⬇️ - "thanks for connecting" 16 seconds: "Hey Vin, thanks for much for connecting with me here on LinkedIn. Looking forward to following along with your content. Don't be a stranger- reach out any time!" 48% reply rate. Wasn't even personalized. You could literally go into Sendspark right now and queue up a list from your SEP to have AI replace the first name in each video. - "is there anyone else?" This one is 1:1 and used when I can tell someone has forwarded my email. You call out the forwarded email, and say "Sounds like there are lots of convos happening over at {{company}} about {{problem mentioned in the email they forwarded}} and we'd love to be a part of them. Anyone else I should be reaching out to, or would y'all want to meet over Zoom and talk through it together?" 95% REPLY RATE (I only ever didn't book a meeting from this email twice) - "look up!" this email was used in every sequence. literally 3-4 seconds of me doing what's pictured in the gif below. used as a thread bump to a higher value, previous email>>> it points to the email above it:) 32% reply rate Try them! You won't try them...... ♻️ But maybe repost so a sales pal who is braver than you can give it a go:)

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